Prime Minister urged to invest in green steel as climate activists reveal Gavin and Stacey artwork on Port Talbot beach

Posted on 25 Sep 2024 by The Manufacturer

Greenpeace and Extinction Rebellion Cymru Wales have unveiled a 50m by 50m artwork of Nessa from BBC hit TV series ‘Gavin and Stacey’, etched in the sand of a beach at Port Talbot, against the iconic backdrop of Tata’s steelworks.

The enormous artwork, which is half the length of a football pitch, portrays the character, Nessa asking the Prime Minister, “Oh Keir, what’s occurring?” to send Starmer a message about the future of UK steel.

The artwork, created by the arts organisation ‘Sand In Your Eye’, took several hours to draw out in the sand overnight, working in total darkness. Four Welsh Greenpeace activists helped to rake the sand and put the finishing touches on the artwork, including the tattoo on Nessa’s arm that translates from Welsh as ‘hearts of steel’.

Following recent job cuts at the nearby Port Talbot steelworks, climate activists and trade unionists are calling on the Prime Minister to create a plan for green steelmaking in the UK which would protect jobs, be better for the climate, and stimulate the economy.

The Port Talbot steelworks, one of the UK’s main steel producers, is facing mass redundancies with the blast furnace due to close imminently. The recent deal reached with the government will provide a smaller electric arc furnace that will melt scrap steel or iron to produce steel, but the steelworks will no longer be able to produce its own primary steel. About 2,500 workers are set to be made redundant, with a further 300 expected to be made redundant in the future. Unions and campaigers argue that this could devastate the local community, and that the recent deal – while an improvement on the previous government’s offer – doesn’t go far enough to support workers or green steel production in the UK.

Greenpeace and Extinction Rebellion Cymru Wales argue that high grade green steel production is crucial for building a green economy. Green steel – including primary steel – is needed for building the wind turbines, railways, and electric vehicles that we need for the transition to a cleaner, greener society.

One option for making green steel that is rapidly advancing around the world – but not yet in the UK – would be to use green hydrogen instead of coal to maintain primary steel production. But campaigners argue that more government investment is needed than is currently on the table. They are calling on the Prime Minister to create and fund a proper green industrial strategy with a commitment to green steel production at its heart. This would protect jobs and communities reliant on the steel industry, avoiding the devastating impacts seen in former mining areas.

Paul Morozzo, Greenpeace UK senior campaigner, said: “We are out here today to urge the Prime Minister to keep steelmaking at home, rather than rely on imported steel, and to put forward a well funded green industrial strategy with green steelmaking at its heart. The green transition requires reindustrialisation in this country, not deindustrialisation that has damaged communities in the past.

“Proper investment in UK green steel production would help our renewable energy supply chain whilst supporting workers and communities in places like Port Talbot and Scunthorpe. This would give us British clean steel to build wind turbines, railways and electric vehicles that we need for the transition to a healthier, more secure, and greener way of life.

“Tackling the climate crisis presents a huge opportunity to create good sustainable jobs, unlocking new economic opportunities for communities all over the country. Climate justice and worker justice must go hand in hand so that we can all experience the huge benefits of the transition to renewable energy.”

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